eborsuborbitals@alien.topB to Data Hoarder@selfhosted.forumEnglish · 1 year agoSeagate's HAMR Update: 32 TB in Early 2024, 40+ TB Two Years Laterwww.anandtech.comexternal-linkmessage-square23fedilinkarrow-up11arrow-down10
arrow-up11arrow-down1external-linkSeagate's HAMR Update: 32 TB in Early 2024, 40+ TB Two Years Laterwww.anandtech.comeborsuborbitals@alien.topB to Data Hoarder@selfhosted.forumEnglish · 1 year agomessage-square23fedilink
minus-squareperflosopher@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoDoubt it. 64TB SSDs are already here in a 2.5"-ish form factor (U.2/u.3/E3.S). 128TB are only a couple years out. 40TB HDDs will be competing with 2.5" 128TB SSDs.
minus-squarenisaaru@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoYour optimism about SSD prices is IMHO unjustified. NANDs are afaik still produced in 14-15nm so the only way they get more capacity is stacking multiple layers. So even if they add more and more layers the price of these NANDs will run into a price/capacity wall.
minus-squareperflosopher@alien.topBlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·1 year agoI’m not saying anything about prices, just about available capacities.
Doubt it. 64TB SSDs are already here in a 2.5"-ish form factor (U.2/u.3/E3.S). 128TB are only a couple years out.
40TB HDDs will be competing with 2.5" 128TB SSDs.
Your optimism about SSD prices is IMHO unjustified.
NANDs are afaik still produced in 14-15nm so the only way they get more capacity is stacking multiple layers.
So even if they add more and more layers the price of these NANDs will run into a price/capacity wall.
I’m not saying anything about prices, just about available capacities.